UFO ALIEN ET Disclosure 2014 Greater Community Spirituality (Chapter Two) Part Two – Video


UFO ALIEN ET Disclosure 2014 Greater Community Spirituality (Chapter Two) Part Two
https://www.newmessage.org/nmfg/Greater_Community_Spirituality.html Greater Community Spirituality presents a prophetic new understanding of God and human sp...

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UFO ALIEN ET Disclosure 2014 Greater Community Spirituality (Chapter Two) Part Two - Video

WISDOM ARCHIVES : Greater Community Spirituality (Chapter Two) What Is The World? – Video


WISDOM ARCHIVES : Greater Community Spirituality (Chapter Two) What Is The World?
https://www.newmessage.org/nmfg/Greater_Community_Spirituality.html Greater Community Spirituality presents a prophetic new understanding of God and human sp...

By: TheWisdom ArchivesOfTheNewMessage

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WISDOM ARCHIVES : Greater Community Spirituality (Chapter Two) What Is The World? - Video

WISDOM ARCHIVES : Greater Community Spirituality (Chapter Three) Part Two What Is Life Force? – Video


WISDOM ARCHIVES : Greater Community Spirituality (Chapter Three) Part Two What Is Life Force?
https://www.newmessage.org/nmfg/Greater_Community_Spirituality.html Greater Community Spirituality presents a prophetic new understanding of God and human sp...

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WISDOM ARCHIVES : Greater Community Spirituality (Chapter Three) Part Two What Is Life Force? - Video

Can any person experience Spiritual Enlightenment? Must I be special? (1 of 4) – Video


Can any person experience Spiritual Enlightenment? Must I be special? (1 of 4)
The Higher Self teachings on perfection continue in this video on Spiritual Enlightenment. Many questions about enlightenment are answered and advice to help...

By: Channel Higher Self

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Can any person experience Spiritual Enlightenment? Must I be special? (1 of 4) - Video

Annual Violence Prevention Summit held

SAN DIEGO - Hundreds of people participated in the annual Community Violence Prevention Summit in Chollas Creek.

Twenty years ago, Larry Blackman never thought he would be part of a solution to get people out of gangs.

A lifelong gang member, Blackman lost a number of friends and spent years in prison for his involvement with drugs, guns and violence.

"I escaped death on many occasions," he added. "There have been many attempts on my life. I know firsthand what it's like to be in gangs and make the wrong decisions when you're running the streets."

That is, until he discovered a spiritual enlightenment. Now, he is back on the streets in his neighborhood. Only this time, he is trying to convince other gang members to get out and do something positive.

"You have to be that living example," he said. "They have to see that change, then that gives them something to shoot for."

On Saturday, Blackman joined law enforcement officials and community activists at the Community Violence Prevention Summit to brainstorm and come up with solutions to keep gangs out of their neighborhoods. It is a partnership that the San Diego Police Department says is working.

In 2012, they say there were 12 gang-related murders. In 2013, there were only three.

Rosa Lozada, who is with Harmonium and was involved with organizing the summit, added, "It's about knowing the resources and efforts that are there and being part of this collectively because that's how we're going to make that largest change."

It is an effort that gives middle school students like Kassandra Elias, who attended the summit, hope that gangs will no longer be a threat in the future.

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Annual Violence Prevention Summit held

Could An 18,000lb Lost Satellite Cause A 'Gravity'-Style Disaster?

Details Published on Saturday, 22 February 2014 10:16

A satellite which the European Space Agency lost contact with in 2012 could create a similar cloud of space debris which hit the International Space Station in the film 'Gravity'A bus-sized satellite that is lost in space could break up and spark a devastating field of debris similar to that which hit Sandra Bullock and George Clooney in the film Gravity.

The threat comes from the nine-metre wide Envisat satellite which lost contact with Earth in 2012 and now orbits under at an altitude of 491 miles (790km).

Scientists believe there is a chance of collision with other satellites and debris during the 150 years it is expected to remain in space. But bringing the satellite back to Earth may prove too costly.

Each year, scientists believe two objects pass the 18,000lb satellite by within about 200m and other spacecraft have had to move out of Envisats path.

It is possible that a collision with Envisat could lead to a chain reaction effect, known as the Kessler Syndrome, which refers to when a cloud of fast-moving debris causes other collisions.

This is the type of a cloud that hit Bullock and Clooney during a spacewalk outside the International Space Station in the film Gravity.

The fact that Envisat is in a near-polar orbit doesnt help, since its path intersects most satellites orbits nearly at right angles, said Professor George Fraser, Director of the Universitys Space Research Centre.

Imagine driving down the motorway and every so often a large truck cuts right across all four lanes right in front of you.

Physics students at Leicester University claim it could make it difficult for future space missions to pass through the region of Envisats altitude, if the region becomes congested with space debris.

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Could An 18,000lb Lost Satellite Cause A 'Gravity'-Style Disaster?

Branson says space flight ready this year

AP Sir Richard Branson says the inaugural Virgin Galactic flight into space will take place this year.

UK businessman Sir Richard Branson has reiterated his claim that the first Virgin Galactic flight into space will take place later this year.

The launch date for the much-delayed project has been put back repeatedly from the original 2007 forecast, but the Virgin entrepreneur has confirmed he will fly with his children on the inaugural flight later in 2014.

Celebrities including Hollywood actors Tom Hanks and Angelina Jolie have apparently reserved spaces to become space tourists, with tickets costing six figures and including brief periods of weightlessness during the two-hour trip to 100km above the Earth.

Branson says in an interview with the Guardian that the first unmanned test flight will take place soon.

The inaugural flight - due later this year - will be televised live by American broadcaster NBC.

"Without a doubt, Sir Richard and his children taking the first commercial flight into space will go down in history as one of the most memorable events on television," NBC said in a statement to the newspaper.

Last month Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo made its third rocket-powered supersonic flight in the Mojave Desert, soaring to a record 21,600 metres.

The company says the reusable space vehicle was carried by aeroplane to 14,000 metres the day before, and then released.

The craft used its rocket motor the rest of the way to reach its highest altitude to date. SpaceShipTwo and its two-member crew then glided to a safe landing in the desert north of Los Angeles.

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Branson says space flight ready this year

Branson sets date for space flight

22/02/2014 - 13:39:14Back to World Home

Businessman Richard Branson has reiterated his claim that the first Virgin Galactic flight into space will take place later this year.

The launch date for the much-delayed project has been put back repeatedly from the original 2007 forecast, but the Virgin entrepreneur has confirmed he will fly with his children on the inaugural flight later in 2014.

Celebrities including Hollywood actors Tom Hanks and Angelina Jolie have apparently reserved spaces to become space tourists, with tickets costing six figures and including brief periods of weightlessness during the two-hour trip to 62 miles above the Earth.

In an interview with the Guardians Weekend magazine, Sir Richard said: When I started Virgin Atlantic, I knew nothing about running airlines. I just felt somebody should be able to do it better than British Airways.

Then we got a lot of creative people who werent from the airline world to go and shake up the business. Starting a spaceship company is not that dissimilar.

According to the Guardian, Sir Richard said the first unmanned test flight will take place soon, and the newspaper said the inaugural flight due later this year will be televised live by American broadcaster NBC.

In a statement to the newspaper, it said: Without a doubt, Sir Richard and his children taking the first commercial flight into space will go down in history as one of the most memorable events on television.

Last month Virgin Galactics SpaceShipTwo made its third rocket-powered supersonic flight in the Mojave Desert, soaring to a record 71,000 feet.

The company says the reusable space vehicle was carried by aeroplane to 46,000 feet the day before, and then released.

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Branson sets date for space flight

Green Kiwi tux heads to Oscars red carpet

The wife of an Oscar winner and the daughter of Cambodian refugees met on a Wairarapa farm yesterday over an unlikely object - a tuxedo made partly of recycled bottles, to be worn by a vampire.

When Suzy Amis-Cameron, wife of blockbuster director James Cameron, was told in a Los Angeles meeting that the winner of her eco-fashion competition was from New Zealand she was amazed: "The connection couldn't be more meaningful than having the winner be from our new home."

The new menswear section of Amis-Cameron's ecologically conscious fashion design competition, Red Carpet Green Dress, was won by Hallenstein Brothers' designer Jomnarn Dul, whose parents fled to New Zealand from Cambodia via a Thai refugee camp.

There, her mother sewed clothes for people who had fled with nothing; yesterday, the Aucklander was hosted by Amis-Cameron at her Wairarapa farm to celebrate the success, which will see Dul's design worn on the red carpet at next Sunday's Oscars by actor Kellan Lutz, who played vampire Emmett Cullen in the Twilight movies.

Former model and actress Amis-Cameron, 52, founded the design competition five years ago, inspired by her husband's box office record-breaking film, Avatar, which has a strong conservation message.

"We were in one of our brain-mash pow-wows and someone said, why don't we do a dress-design competition?"

The motivation was fundraising for her conservation-oriented, not-for-profit MUSE School in California, founded with sister Rebecca Amis nine years ago, which provides scholarships to half its students.

Each year since, the winning gown, made of sustainably produced fabrics, has been worn by an actress on the red carpet at the Academy Awards.

Amis-Cameron, a mother of three children with Cameron, as well as one from a previous marriage and one from one of Cameron's previous marriage, tries to dress her family in fabrics which were neither toxic for the planet, nor for their bodies, and made without "destroying lives" in sweat-shops.

"It's a much, much bigger issue for me, it's not just a pretty dress to wear on the red carpet . . . Everybody wears clothes."

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Green Kiwi tux heads to Oscars red carpet

Red Sox will lean on Lester, deep rotation

Red Sox starter Jon Lester delivers a pitch during Thursday's practice in Fort Myers, Fla. AP PHOTO

Sentinel and Enterprise staff photos can be ordered by visiting our Smugmug site.

FORT MYERS, Fla. (AP) -- The "no vacancy" sign is up for the Red Sox rotation.

With five veteran starters, the World Series champions have no openings. But if they did, there would be several outstanding young candidates competing for them -- and others not too far away.

Coming off a brilliant postseason, Jon Lester leads the starting staff after pitching a career-high 213 1-3 innings. Clay Buchholz, John Lackey, Jake Peavy and Felix Doubront complete the group that should have little trouble weathering Ryan Dempster's decision not to play in 2014 for physical and personal reasons.

Brandon Workman heads the young group after a year in which he wasn't even in the major league camp yet went 6-3 with the Red Sox. Manager John Farrell showed faith by having him pitch the eighth inning -- he retired St. Louis in order -- of Boston's clinching Game 6 of the World Series.

The more pitching, the better.

"I don't think any of us have any false confidence or an embarrassment of riches because we've seen that pitching is a game of attrition," Farrell said Friday. "We went through 20-something relievers last year so we were fortunate, with the exception of maybe Clay's situation, we were relatively healthy in the rotation. But that can change in a moment's notice."

Like when Dempster surprised management about two weeks ago with his decision not to play the final year of his contract.

So the Red Sox added left-hander Chris Capuano to work in the bullpen and as insurance for the rotation.

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Red Sox will lean on Lester, deep rotation